Rao bulletin 15 August 2015 html edition this bulletin contains the following articles


It is important to note that, although these details can significantly help



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It is important to note that, although these details can significantly help, VA does not rely only on service treatment records when deciding claims for cases that are related to the 1973 fire.
While this can appear daunting, there is help available; VA encourages you to work with an accredited representative or agent if you need assistance. Go to http://www.va.gov/ogc/apps/accreditation/index.asp to verify accreditation. You can also request an attorney, claims agent, or Veteran Service Organization representative online. Go to https://www.ebenefits.va.gov/ebenefits/about/feature?feature=request-vso-representative for assistance in locating one.
The ramifications of this tragedy have been longstanding and well documented, and it couldn’t have happened to a more heroic group of Veterans at a worse time—when those files were needed most. Archaeologists two centuries from now are not going to magically dig up microfiche duplicates that were never created. Those records are lost to time. With NPRC’s assistance, VA is committed to ensuring that no eligible but affected Veteran goes without the benefits and services (or information) to which he and she have earned. In 2012, NPRC relocated to a new building housing 60 million records (from the Spanish-American War to about the year 2000) in 1.8 million boxes “in a climate-controlled warehouse with a constant temperature of about 35 degrees and with a relative humidity that never dips below 40 percent.” [Source: VAntage Point Blog | Jason Davis | August 10, 2015 ++]
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The Daily Show Jon Stewart vs. VA
During his 16-plus-year run at the desk of "The Daily Show," Jon Stewart trafficked in the same military-themed segments as many of his television brethren: He did pushups for charity, he went on a USO tour with a magician and a noted mailman, and he ... did more pushups for charity. Tests of upper-body strength aside, one of Stewart's unique, lasting contributions to military matters may be his frequent, frustration-filled salvos at the Veterans Affairs Department. He's cranked out several "Daily Show" segments over the years that have have helped spotlight VA problems for a broader audience — an effort that's not gone unappreciated.
"I don't think there's a person in the media who's done more to elevate veterans' issues, and to push for policy change," said Paul Reickhoff, head of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, which presented Stewart with the 2013 IAVA Civilian Service Award. "There's a lot of kind of empty clapping going on, but actually understanding the nuance of policy ... things that matter, Jon Stewart's been in a league of his own. And I guess the best example I would give is the [VA] backlog."
Stewart's VA coverage topped the IRS and other entries in a viewer's choice poll, selected as the show's "favorite federal takedown" as part of a career-in-review special. It also made Rolling Stone's list of the host's top targets. "The least we can do is keep the promises we made to the individuals who have given so much, and I will continue to be an annoyance to the people who do not do that," Stewart said after accepting the IAVA honor. The coverage even earned its own recurring prop: A super-sized swear jar:
http://2.images.comedycentral.com/images/shows/tds/videos/season_19/19097/ds_19097_02.jpg?quality=0.85&width=225&height=127&crop=true
That April 2014 rant (http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/ha0alm/a-bureaucracy-of-dunces---veterans-affairs-f--k-ups) reacted to reports of mismanagement at a Phoenix VA facility that included 1,700 veterans signing up for appointments and never appearing on the official wait list. It was far from the only time the VA made headlines during Stewart's tenure:

  • A 2009 clip (http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/mnr7kx/that-can-t-be-right---veterans--health-insurance took the Obama administration to task for its proposal to bill private insurers for VA care. Stewart suggests some alternate defense-related fundraising methods to cover the costs, such as sponsorship rights to the Medal of Honor. In the aftermath of the Comedy Central coverage, Rieckhoff said, "we got invited into the White House. ... We knew that it was hurting them to get hit on Jon Stewart":

  • A Sep 2013 clip (http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/ynh4ed/ignoring-private-ryan) addressing the ever-present VA backlog and disease outbreaks at VA facilities in Pittsburgh and Buffalo, in which Stewart asks the question nobody else would ask: Is the VA being run by "Breaking Bad" character Jesse Pinkman, "driving around to VA hospitals and throwing money out the window?"

  • A nearly eight-minute show-opening segment from June 2014 that traces VA's problems back to the Truman administration, rips its 80s-era technology still in use by the agency ("You're running OS Tandy 1000!") and features Stewart all but climbing over his desk at the two-minute mark: http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/r9nm2k/v-a--men--delays-of-future-past.

  • A dissection of the VA Choice program from March of this year, one that ridiculed the agency for the since-changed policy of using as-the-crow-flies mileage determinations for eligibility — a measure not particularly useful to "non-crows," Stewart points out: http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/b8rw1k/doctor-when.

  • May 2014's "World of WarriorShaft," (http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/chc449/world-of-warriorshaft) in which Stewart smacks down both Republican lawmakers and President Obama for failing to address VA matters.

  • May 2013's "Red Tape Diaries," (http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/uhm1vj/the-red-tape-diaries---va-reform), where Stewart summarizes then-VA Secretary (and retired Army Gen.) Eric Shinseki's backlog-clearing pledge in a way VA likely wouldn't appreciate: "In two more years, they’re hoping to have you wait only four more months.”

"If you want to talk about the exposure of Shinseki's leadership failures," Rieckhoff said. "I don't know if anybody was more effective than Jon Stewart. We had been trying to make the case for years that Shinseki was failing. ... When Jon Stewart tore into it, it really started to change the conversation." Stewart's final "Daily Show" aired 6 AUG. His show, which had an ongoing program to help former service members break into the entertainment industry, also ran one last contest to support former service members: The winner of a charity raffle was scheduled to attend the final taping, with proceeds from the drawing going to The Mission Continues, a group that encourage community service among veterans as a way to channel their skills and support their transition into civilian life. "We've had a lot of different celebrities at our events; the vets are good at sniffing out who the fakes are," Rieckhoff said. "Jon Stewart is an authentic guy. [Source: ArmyTimes | Kevin Lilley | August 6, 2015 ++]


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VA HCS Northern CA Vet’s Death Blamed on DNR Wristband
An erroneous wristband placed on a 65-year-old Vietnam veteran caused a “delay in life-saving intervention” at the Mather VA facility in Sacramento, federal investigators say in a new report prompted by the patient’s death under questionable circumstances last October. The wristband incorrectly identified patient Roland Mayo as having given a “Do Not Resuscitate” order, also known as a DNR. A Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General report stated, “Facility staff did not follow through on the patient’s request upon admission to discuss advance directives. We found no evidence of advance care planning discussion during the patient’s hospital stay.” The resulting “confusion” about Mayo’s status “delayed chest compressions, defibrillation pad placement, and medications” when he went into cardiac arrest, investigators with the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General concluded. As a result, two precious minutes reportedly passed between the time Mayo’s pulse stopped and CPR began. “The American Heart Association recommends initiating immediate chest compressions for adults suffering from sudden cardiopulmonary arrest,” investigators noted.
They further described a seemingly frantic scene on the day of Mayo’s death, during which so many medical personnel crowded into the patient’s room that they blocked the doorway and spilled out into the hallway. “A nursing supervisor and physician requested several times for nonessential personnel to leave, but no one did so,” investigators noted. “Staff reported having difficulties hearing the physician’s orders throughout the code because there were so many people in the room.” At one point, investigators added, an anesthesiologist showed up and asked if any assistance was needed. Told, incorrectly, that Mayo had a DNR order, the anesthesiologist left. She was about 50 steps away when she heard a second “code blue” announced over the loudspeaker and she returned to Mayo’s room, investigators recounted.
The congressman who requested the inquiry into Mayo’s death, Rep. Ami Bera (D-CA), said he was “extremely troubled” by the findings. Bera, who is a medical doctor, called on the VA to implement corrective actions nationwide. “I know that every second counts in an emergency,” Bera declared. Sacramento-based attorney J.R. Parker, who is representing Mayo’s three children in a federal lawsuit filed last month, said in an interview that the report “is performing a really important service” by shedding light on what happened. In their official response, VA officials say they have developed “a very robust process to ensure systems are in place to correct all of the findings” identified in the report. New policies have been put in place and additional training has been provided, officials say. The patient wristbands have also been redesigned. Tara Ricks, spokeswoman for the VA’s Northern California Health Care System, added in a statement 30 JUL that the agency “welcomes more opportunities to further evaluate our procedures and identify areas for improvement.” “We are deeply dedicated to the health and safety of our patients and will continue to take swift and corrective actions to address the identified items in the OIG report,” Ricks added.
The 180-bed Sacramento Mather facility is part of the VA’s Sierra Pacific Network, also known as the Veterans Integrated Service Network 21. The sprawling network provides medical services to veterans throughout northern Nevada, northern and central California and Hawaii. A Citrus Heights, Calif., resident, Mayo had served in the Army’s 101st Airborne Division and worked as a Riverside County deputy sheriff. He had a medical history that included hypertension and post-traumatic stress disorder when he entered the hospital for elective heart surgery. Mayo did not have a DNR or other advanced health-care directive when he was admitted, though he told hospital officials he would “would like to discuss” the issue. Nonetheless, investigators found, Mather officials “did not follow through on the patient’s request.
The patient wristband provided Mayo included several pieces of information that were incorrect, such as that he was at risk for choking or for wandering off, in addition to the incorrect statement that he had a DNR, investigators found. They did not determine whether the errors were due to a clerical mistake or a software glitch. On Mayo’s ninth day in the hospital, he cried out while in the bathroom. A nurse found him lying on the floor, breathing and with a pulse. Then, investigators recounted, Mayo vomited and became limp and unresponsive. Lifted onto his bed, Mayo continued vomiting while hospital staff tried to suction his airway. “We were informed by staff at the bedside multiple times that the patient was DNR/DNI and the patient had a wrist band to support this,” the lead physician subsequently reported. “After (about) 3-4 minutes we were later told his code status was unclear.”
Mayo’s pulse reportedly stopped three minutes after the “code blue” was first called. At the five minute mark, investigators say, “a staff member concluded that there was no DNR/DNI order in the computer” and the full array of CPR and defibrillation techniques were tried, to no avail. Investigators attributed Mayo’s death to “aspiration of gastric contents into the lungs.” Rapid control of the airway, typically through intubation, is the way to avoid this, investigators noted. [Source: McClatchey DC | Michael Doyle | July 30, 2015 ++]
facility picture

********************************_VAMC_Cleveland_Update_01_►_Trail_Begins_for_Director’s_Accused_Briber'>*********************************_VA_HCS_Black_Hills_SD_Update_02_►_1100_Patient_Records_Trashed'>Sacramento Mather VAMC
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VA HCS Black Hills SD Update 021100 Patient Records Trashed
An employee at the Hot Springs campus of the VA Black Hills Health Care System in South Dakota threw into a trash bin the records of more than 1,100 patients containing Social Security numbers and other personal information. The VA Black Hills Health Care System blamed the breach on an employee who mistakenly tossed the patient files into a dumpster on 15 MAY during a regular office move. The records were found two days later by another employee who fished them out of the trash and notified hospital security guards. The VA has alerted the 1,100 military veterans of the breach by letter. The letter informed recipients they could request a free credit report to ensure their personal data was not being misused. [Source: NAUS Weekly Update | August 14, 2015 ++]
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VAMC St. Cloud MN Update 14 Probe Finds Mismanagement

The St. Cloud Veterans Affairs Medical Center has suffered mass resignations of health care providers, sending patient loads soaring and leading to rampant cancellations of veteran health care appointments, and the center’s leadership has fostered a work environment where employees are scared to report problems, an internal VA probe concluded. The investigation found pervasive “fear of reprisal and not wanting to get on the bad side of the medical center director and chief of staff.” Between 2011 and 2013, more than two dozen primary care doctors resigned. Average workloads per doctor skyrocketed to 1,800 patients in July 2013, up by more than 400 patients from only a month earlier. Care delivery site data showed the appointment cancellation rate hit 40 percent. Employee satisfaction ranked among the lowest of any VA facility in the country in 2013 and 2014, according to statistics cited by investigators and the VA inspector general.


St. Cloud VA officials say that since the investigation was completed in January 2014, they have hired more doctors, decreased patient loads, instituted supervisory training and conducted regular employee town halls to improve communication. “We have taken the review findings seriously and have instituted numerous actions to correct the deficiencies noted,” spokesman Barry Venable said in a statement. But union officials who represent St. Cloud employees say problems remain. “It’s just a sick, pervasive, toxic environment up there,” said Jane Nygaard, national vice president of the American Federation of Government Employees.
The problems have simmered without public knowledge for years, in part because of a little known complaint resolution system that allows the VA to investigate itself and close cases without notifying the public. Complaints to the agency’s inspector general’s office, which is responsible under federal law for acting as an independent watchdog to root out mismanagement within the VA, are routinely referred to local and regional VA officials to investigate, fix any problems and report back. If the inspector general’s office believes they have adequately addressed any issues, it closes the case without releasing the investigation report.
That’s what happened with the St. Cloud probe. But a whistleblower at the Phoenix VA obtained a copy of the investigation report and is making it public for the first time while calling for the release of other similar reports from across the country. “Ideally all of them (should be released) for complete transparency, but at least the substantiated reports need to be public record,” said Dr. Katherine Mitchell, who helped expose the patient wait-time scandal that led to the resignation last year of former VA Secretary Eric Shinseki. “Right now it’s going to be up to the public to demand follow-up, because the IG doesn’t seem to be following up.” The inspector general received 62,316 complaints between Oct. 1, 2013, and March 31 this year, according to reports submitted to Congress. Of those, the inspector general opened 2,424 cases. It’s unclear how many of those resulted in substantiated claims that were never made public. Catherine Gromek, a spokeswoman for the VA Office of Inspector General, did not respond to messages seeking comment.
Someone complained to the inspector general about conditions at the St. Cloud VA after five health care providers resigned from the facility in a six-week span during summer 2013. The inspector general asked regional VA officials who oversee the facility to investigate. The complainant, who is not named in the investigation report, recounted the mass resignations and said providers were treated in an “abusive and disrespectful manner by management.” The complainant further alleged that veteran care was jeopardized, and facility management did not respond adequately to what was happening. The regional VA investigators concluded that veteran care was not compromised, but they did confirm that “excessive workloads” led to mass departures of health care providers and that providers were treated in a “disrespectful manner” by senior management.
The investigators dismissed claims from facility leadership that complaints came from a “small group of disgruntle(d) employees,” and pointed to employee satisfaction surveys in 2013 that showed higher discontent among St. Cloud employees than the national VA average. The report said facility managers were trying to correct the problems with an aggressive recruiting push, attempts to better retain staff with a mentoring program for new hires and slower orientation, and pledges that facility Director Barry I. Bahl and Chief of Staff Dr. Susan M. Markstrom would meet regularly with providers to improve communication. But a year later, a separate inspector general report issued in January 2015 said employee satisfaction at the St. Cloud VA remained low in 2014, ranking among the 25 lowest-scoring VA facilities out of 128 across the country.
And Nygaard, the AFGE union representative who has traveled to St. Cloud to represent VA employees, said senior managers have done little to improve the work environment. “They continue to lose doctors,” Nygaard said. She said employees still are scared to report problems for fear of retaliation from management. Venable contends the data in the January 2015 report was outdated and said the most recent data shows employee satisfaction has improved the facility’s rank to among the 50 lowest facilities in the country. He said improvements indicated “an increase in the providers’ belief that they can bring up problems.”
He said recruiting and retention challenges faced by the facility mirror those of the health care industry as a whole, which is facing provider shortages. And he said finding people to work at a facility in rural Minnesota can be “very challenging.” Nevertheless, he said, the facility hired eight doctors and 14 mid-level providers in 2014. “The St. Cloud VA Health Care System is focused on providing high quality health care in a timely manner and delivering it with a positive experience,” he said. “When we fall short of these goals, we take steps to correct deficiencies.” [Source: USA Today | Donovan Slack | August 8, 2015| ++]
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VAMC Cleveland Update 01 Trail Begins for Director’s Accused Briber
Opening arguments were held 10 AUG in the trial of a business executive accused of paying bribes to the former head of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Cleveland in exchange for inside information related to contracts. Mark Farmer, 55, of Arlington, Virginia faces charges of conspiracy, racketeering, embezzlement, and theft of public money, mail fraud and wire fraud. He was indicted in November. Prosecutors say Farmer, while working for a design firm referred to in court filings as "Business 75", paid bribes between 2010-13 to then VA Medical Center Director William Montague. The trial is expected to last about three weeks. Farmer's case is in front of U.S. District Judge Sara Lioi in Akron. Refer to https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/2203946/mark-farmer-indictment.pdf for a copy of the indictment.
Montague, the former head of the Cleveland and Dayton VA medical centers, pleaded guilty in February to 64 corruption-related charges. He was scheduled to be sentenced in September but he entered into a new agreement to cooperate with federal prosecutors in which he would testify against Farmer. The cooperation means Montague, 64, could spend as little as 4 1/2 years in federal prison. Montague and Farmer are two of more than 60 elected officials, public employees and contractors convicted as a result of a corruption investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Among those convicted is former county Commissioner Jimmy Dimora, who is serving a 28-year prison sentence.
Montague, admitted in court 11 AUG that high-level officials in Washington, D.C. gave him documents about upcoming projects that he probably shouldn't have had, and that he passed them on to those who paid him as a consultant. He said James Sullivan, director of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs' Office of Asset Enterprise Management, and others gave him confidential information when he made his monthly visits to Washington. He did this after retiring from Cleveland's medical center in 2010, but while he served as the interim director of the Dayton VA Medical Center. He said his history with the VA, as well as his interim status in Dayton, afforded him access that others would never get. "[Sullivan] would say 'keep this close to the chest,' 'don't pass this around,' that sort of thing if it was really sensitive," said Montague.
While on the stand Montague, 64, showed little emotion as he answered questions from Assistant U.S. Attorney Toni Bacon. He said that he never told Sullivan and others why he wanted files on upcoming projects. "I was not honest by means of omission," he said. Much of the testimony involved explaining dozens of emails sent to himself, Farmer and others and what information he provided to Farmer. When consulting for CannonDesign, Montague said, he almost exclusively dealt with Farmer and that the firm paid him $2,500 a month between 2010-12 for one day of work. The documents pertained to medical facility projects the VA had in the pipeline, he said. They showed what projects were likely to be included in an upcoming federal budget, though that information is only supposed to be released in February of each year.
Montague said he obtained information about projects in Illinois, Kentucky and California and passed them on to Farmer and his other clients. He said that he believed Farmer knew the files he passed on were not for dissemination and that Farmer never told him to only deliver files that are publicly available. His testimony is expected to continue on Wednesday. [Source: Northeast Ohio Media Group | Eric Heisig | August 2015 ++]
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VARO Cleveland OH Claims | Backlog Down - Appeals Up
On the 11th floor of the Federal Building on East Ninth Street at Lakeside Avenue are ranks of old filing cabinets stand in seemingly endless rows. Nearly all of those cabinets are empty and await recycling. Once they were stuffed with the paper files of claims made by Ohio veterans with the Cleveland Regional Benefit Office of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Now, 99 percent of those claims for disabilities related to military service are computerized, making access and transferring the information quicker and easier. It is a plus for veterans and a paperless victory for the office -- one of several gains cited recently by its director, Anthony Milons Sr., and staff members who recently reviewed a scorecard, of sorts, of their work during the completed fiscal year.

veterans administration answers questions of what to do when va says no


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